Sage Brown Poem by anais vionet

Sage Brown

Rating: 4.0


Peter is joining us for lunch in the cafeteria. I met him on a crowded Saturday morning at a coffee shop. He's from the flammable, paper-dry, sagebrush hills of Malibu and grew up overlooking the hazy blue Pacific Ocean. He says Mel Gibson's drunken Nazi rant, when a cop pulled him over for a DUI, put them on the map.

Poor Peter is fashion challenged. He's 25, too tall, and too thin. Reading glasses hang around his neck. His too loose-fitting clothes are all variations of brown, like tawny, penny and wenge. He's wearing a battered tweed coat, brown corduroy slacks and tortilla colored mock turtleneck. He's adorably shabby-fancy. If he fell in the dormant, straw-yellow grass, we probably couldn't find him.

Peter has a serious aura of experience about him. His cheek bones are sharp, his hair is an explosion of uncombed black, his skin is pale - bleached - by over exposure to library lighting.

He lives in a different world - the prosaic, laissez-faire universe of research - where students are left to their own devices and expected to self-manage.

Right now, he's being vetted by one of my roommates, Leong. His student lanyard marks him, but she wants specifics if he's going to hang around. 'What's your major? ' she asks, her eyes squinting like the Chinese lie detectors they are. 'I'm a doctoral student in applied physics, ' he says.

I pat his knee, 'It's nothing to be ashamed of.' I say, reassuringly.

Tuesday, March 1, 2022
Topic(s) of this poem: university,friends,teen,humor,life
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Khairul Ahsan 10 March 2022

Loved the ending.

1 0 Reply
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anais vionet

anais vionet

Paris, France
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